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Kaysville, Utah

Golf Course Homes for Sale in Kaysville, Utah

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Kaysville sits on the Wasatch Front bench in Davis County, about 20 minutes north of Salt Lake City and 10 minutes south of Hill Air Force Base. The town's golf scene centers on Valley View Golf Course, a city-owned 18-hole layout on the west side near the Great Salt Lake flats, with Davis Park Golf Course just south in Fruit Heights as a second option. Homes backing the fairways at Valley View tend to be solid mid-century ranches and updated two-stories on generous lots, with newer custom builds filling in along Nicholls Road and the streets off Sunset Drive. Mountain views to the east and open course views to the west are a common combination on these lots.

Buyers drawn to golf course homes in Kaysville are usually after the lifestyle and the lot, not a gated club experience — Valley View is public, dues-free, and walkable from most surrounding streets. Greens fees stay reasonable, the course closes in winter due to Wasatch Front snow, and summer evenings on a course-facing patio are the real selling point. Schools feed into Davis School District (Kaysville Elementary, Centennial Junior, Davis High), and the Kaysville FrontRunner station puts downtown SLC within a 25-minute train ride. Inventory of true fairway-adjacent homes is limited at any given time, so it pays to watch the MLS closely. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

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June 2026 · Kaysville market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Kaysville right now.

Full Kaysville market report
Median sale
$585,000
20 closed in June 2026
Median DOM
31 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.6%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
82
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About golf course homes in Kaysville.

Which golf courses in Kaysville have homes built along the fairways?

Valley View Golf Course on the west side of town is the main course with adjacent housing — a city-owned 18-hole layout off Nicholls Road. Homes in the Valley View neighborhood, Fairway Park, and along Sunset Drive back directly to fairways or sit within a short walk of the clubhouse. Buyers also look just south to Davis Park Golf Course in Fruit Heights for similar fairway-adjacent options.

Do golf course homes in Kaysville carry HOA fees?

Most don't. Valley View is a public municipal course, not a private club community, so the surrounding neighborhoods are mostly standard single-family subdivisions without mandatory HOAs. A handful of newer pocket developments have light HOAs covering common landscaping, but you won't see the steep dues common in private golf communities elsewhere.

What's the price range for fairway-adjacent homes here?

Most golf course homes in Kaysville run from the upper $600s into the $900s, with larger custom builds on premium lots crossing $1M. Direct fairway frontage typically adds a 5–10% premium over comparable interior-lot homes. Inventory is thin — usually only a handful of true course-adjacent listings active at any time.

Is Valley View open year-round?

The course is generally open from March through October or early November, depending on snow and frost. Kaysville sits at about 4,300 feet on the Wasatch Front bench, so winters bring real snow cover and the course closes for the season. Homeowners get quiet off-season months without cart traffic behind the yard.

How's the commute from these neighborhoods to Salt Lake or Hill Air Force Base?

Kaysville is roughly 20 minutes south to downtown Salt Lake via I-15 and about 10 minutes north to Hill AFB in Layton. The Kaysville FrontRunner station is a 5-minute drive from the Valley View area, which makes car-free commutes to Salt Lake or Ogden realistic for many residents.

Are stray golf balls a real concern for fairway-lot owners?

It depends on the hole. Lots along the rough or behind tee boxes see occasional balls; lots in line with a dogleg can see more. Most sellers can tell you honestly how often it happens, and many fairway homes have higher fencing, mesh screens, or strategic tree placement. Worth asking during showings and checking window glass on the course-facing side.